University of Missouri Extension

The Impact of Livestock Production: A Case Study of Three Missouri Counties

Seanicaa EdwardsExtension AssociateCommercial Agriculture Program

Ray MasseyExtension ProfessorCommercial Agriculture Program

Missouri is experiencing two seemingly contradictory economic developments. The number of cropland acres harvested is declining while the total value of agricultural products sold is increasing. This increase in value can be seen in both crop and livestock sales, with the largest increase being in livestock sales. For example, almost twice as many hogs and almost seven times as many chickens were sold in Missouri in 2002 as in 1982.

This guide compares three Missouri counties, two of which have experienced a dramatic change in agricultural commodities produced. In 1987, Carroll, Pettis and Vernon counties each had between 1,000 and 1,325 farms on 375,000 to 405,000 acres (see Table 1). Each county produced a relatively diverse set of agricultural products, including crops and livestock. Figure 1 shows the similarities in land farmed and market value of agricultural products sold in each county in 1987.

Data sourceCensus of Agriculture except where noted.

Notes1The principal occupation of the operators(s) is the occupation at which an operator spent the majority of his or her time.2 Sales tax receipts per 1 percent source: Economic and Policy Analysis Research Center, University of Missouri-Columbia.

(D) Withheld to avoid disclosing data for individual farms.

Figure 1. Market value of crops and livestock sold and acres of farmland in 1987. (Source: Census of Agriculture)

In 2007, Pettis County sold twice as many chickens as in 1997 and Vernon County sold 16 times as many hogs as in 1992. With the increase of animal agriculture in Pettis and Vernon counties, the number of acres of cropland harvested increased slightly in Pettis County and declined in Vernon County from 1987 to 2007. During the same period, the total number of farms in each of the three counties increased, with the number of farms in Carroll County increasing 18 percent, in Pettis County 6 percent and in Vernon County 10 percent.

The number of head of livestock sold in the three counties changed significantly from 1987 to 2007. The number of cattle sold increased almost 18 percent in Pettis County and 39 percent in Vernon County and decreased 11 percent in Carroll County. The number of hogs sold decreased 91 percent in Carroll County and 16 percent in Pettis County but increased almost 3,500 percent in Vernon County. Only about 34,000 hogs were sold in Vernon County in 1987; in 2007, over 1.2 million were sold. Pettis County had a similar situation with chicken production. In 1987, none of these three counties reported chicken production. Then in 2007, Carroll and Vernon counties had insignificant chicken sales, but Pettis County sold over 29 million birds.

The most apparent change besides the total number of animals sold was in the market value of agricultural products sold, as shown in Figure 2. In Carroll County, the market value of crops increased at a relatively steady pace while the value of livestock sold declined. In Pettis and Vernon counties, the value of crops sold remained relatively stable from 1987 to 2002 and increased only slightly in 2007, but the value of livestock sold rose markedly. In Pettis County, the value of livestock sold more than tripled; and in Vernon County, in 2007 it was five times what it had been in 1987. The total value of agricultural products sold in these two counties increased considerably due primarily to increases in livestock production.

Sales tax collection

Increases in agricultural production impact the local economy. This impact can be seen in local sales tax collections. Sales tax receipts change due to changes in tax rates or in volume of products and services sold. To observe increases in economic activity (products and services sold), tax receipts assuming a 1 percent sales tax are used. Figure 3 shows changes in local sales tax receipts assuming a sales tax of 1 percent. All three counties reached peak changes in local sales taxes — by 69 percent in Carroll, 142 percent in Pettis and 109 percent in Vernon — in 2008 before experiencing a decrease of about 20 percent in 2009. The impact on tax receipts may also be understated due to current sales tax exemptions on livestock sales, purchase of animal feeds and medicines and use of farm machinery.

Figure 3. Percent change in local sales tax receipts, assuming a sales tax rate of 1 percent. (Source: Economic and Policy Research Center, University of Missouri-Columbia)

SourceMU Economic and Policy Research Center

Conclusion

Within a finite land base, increases in crop production will occur from technological advances. Such increases have been occurring at a steady yet measured pace. Producers looking for options to add additional income and value to production so as to generate more income will likely find that animal production offers the greatest opportunities.

Animal agriculture has added a considerable amount of value to agricultural products sold in Pettis and Vernon counties. The difference in market value of agricultural products sold is significant between those two counties, with their increases in confined animal operations, and Carroll County, which had no increase in animal agriculture. The value of crop production is increasing in all three counties, but the value of livestock production is increasing only in Pettis and Vernon counties.

Original authorsAnn Ulmer and Ray Massey, Department of Agricultural Economics

MP747 The Impact of Livestock Production: A Case Study of Three Missouri Counties | University of Missouri Extension